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Where you can find a job in Victoria right now

We can reveal the 90,000 jobs, by region, that are waiting to be filled as the Australian employment market slowly recovers from the shock of COVID-19. USE OUR SEARCH TOOL

Jobs360: revealing where the jobs are – and how you can secure them

The road to economic recovery is under construction and being lead by healthcare and our tradies.

Today we can reveal the 90,000 jobs, by region, that are waiting to be filled as the Australian employment market slowly recovers from the shock of COVID-19.

Hospitality hiring is also making a comeback, although demand in the travel industry remains very low.

Figures from job site Adzuna last week revealed Victoria’s largest employing sectors were healthcare and nursing (2508 available roles), trades and construction (1335), information technology (1043) and teaching (835).

Adzuna country manager for Australia and New Zealand Tejas Deshpande said job ad numbers were growing.

“In some states, demand for workers has returned to normal levels, replacing those jobs that were lost due to COVID – but we need more new jobs to be created,” he said.

“While the virus is a threat, any return to normal is an achievement right now.”

Watch our special Jobs 360 investigation in the video above.

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Mr Deshpande said there had been a particular increase in hospitality and catering hiring in New South Wales, Queensland and Canberra, as more and more restaurants reopened.

The travel industry, however, was yet to rebound.

Last week, there were fewer than 50 travel jobs advertised across the whole country.

Hays regional director Eliza Kirkby said jobseekers were becoming more flexible and open-minded when looking for work.

They were willing to apply in different industries and less central locations.

“We recently recruited a number of roles for an abattoir and we were able to find candidates that wouldn’t have previously considered working in that environment,” she said.

“We are seeing candidates that were unprepared to consider temp roles previously, for the first time in their careers are open to temp work.

“We are seeing a much larger appetite of candidates being open to relocation or commuting longer distances.”

Ms Kirkby said there had been an increase in hiring in some regional areas, particularly off the back of increased tourist numbers as people travelled within their own states to comply with border restrictions.

“We are also seeing high demand for experienced professionals in resources and mining, healthcare, defence, IT, construction, trades and labour, office support, and accountancy and finance,” she said.

“In Victoria in particular, we are certainly seeing a stronger demand in regional centres than in metropolitan Melbourne.”

Jason Tsitsopoulos is studying data analytics through Deakin University after losing his job teaching English to non-English speakers as a result of COVID-19. Picture: Ian Currie
Jason Tsitsopoulos is studying data analytics through Deakin University after losing his job teaching English to non-English speakers as a result of COVID-19. Picture: Ian Currie

‘I NEED TO LOOK FOR SOMETHING ELSE’

Melbourne’s Jason Tsitsopoulos started 2020 as an English Foreign Language teacher moving into the Canadian film industry.

Since the pandemic, he now hopes to end 2020 with a job in data science.

“With English language teaching, (COVID-19) has pretty much decimated the industry as international students coming for uni have now stopped,” the Mont Albert resident said.

“My friends who are more experienced than me are looking for work and not finding anything.

“Both the industry I was working in and the one I was transitioning to have been disrupted quite a lot so now I need to look for something else.”

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When Mr Tsitsopoulos, 31, heard about the Federal Government’s Higher Education Relief Package, which included a range of heavily-subsidised short university courses, he “jumped at the chance” to enrol in a Graduate Certificate in Data Analytics.

The postgraduate degree that would have usually cost about $14,000 was made available for $2500.

“I chose that one because I know that IT is super important going forward,” he said.

“I decided I needed to upskill and learn the language of the future, which is coding.”

Mr Tsitsopoulos, who is currently receiving Jobseeker, is on track to graduate this month but is not sure if the four-subject course will be enough to qualify him for work in his chosen field.

“I’m quietly confident I will get something in the next year, but will I get something in the next couple of months? I am not so confident,” he said.

“If the government is really serious about getting people in IT, cybersecurity and data analytics and data science, they should be sponsoring the whole masters course or bachelor’s course.”

JOBS 360 is a special News Corp roundtable discussion on Australia’s jobs crisis.
JOBS 360 is a special News Corp roundtable discussion on Australia’s jobs crisis.

OPTIMISTIC AUSSIES UPSKILLING FOR JOB SECURITY

There is greater optimism than pessimism about the employment outlook, according to a major national survey that also reveals a third of Australians are upskilling to increase their job security or work prospects.

Another key finding was just how adaptable most workers are with two-thirds of respondents willing to change industry if required and more than half prepared to move for a job.

The insights emerge from an exclusive jobs study among 1887 Australian adults by leading pollsters YouGov following last week’s federal budget. YouGov research director Julie Harris said the survey showed most people considered tax cuts for workers to be best way to get the job market back on track.

However, Ms Harris added, workers who felt more nervous about their employment than a year ago – and that’s nearly half the population – were less likely to spend any windfall from Canberra.

“And that’s a real issue for the recovery, with the way the Morrison government has outlaid money through tax cuts,” she said.

While 48 per cent of people felt less secure in their job than 12 months earlier, 40 per cent believed they were just as safe. And one in 10 had an increased sense of confidence.

Ms Harris said there was positivity among many Australians that the nation would recover from COVID-19.

“Four in 10 are saying it’s tough right now but we’ll get back on track – a level of optimism is definitely there,” she said. “But you’ve still got a third – and that’s a massive amount of people – who are pessimistic.”

Across the generations, Millennial and Generation X workers were most optimistic about the employment outlook, while Baby Boomers were less hopeful.

Men were more positive than women, as were people who are married when compared to singles.

In NSW, more people were slightly more optimistic than the national average.

In Victoria, understandably, people were less optimistic than the national average.

In South Australia, people were less optimistic than the national average.

In the Sunshine State, people were slightly more optimistic than the national average.

Ms Harris said the poll demonstrated that “Australians are very adaptable”. This is borne out by the finding that 67 per cent of Australians who are able to work were prepared to switch to another sector of the economy. And 56 per cent were willing to move within their city (24 per cent), state (13 per cent) or the nation (19 per cent) for a new job.

Ms Harris said it was important for policymakers “to look at who was willing” to move.

Women were more likely to say they would not be prepared to change. “That might be a structural issue such as that they can’t get childcare,” Ms Harris said.

People from NSW were least prepared (16 per cent) to move interstate, compared to 21 per cent of Victorians, 22 per cent of Queenslanders and 17 per cent of South Australians.

Nationally, 17 per cent of respondents said that since the pandemic began they had undertaken career-oriented training or learned new skills to improve their job security and another 16 per cent said they were about to.

Fifty-five per cent of workers reported they had not lost their job or had their hours cut. But 17 per cent said they had been made unemployed and 28 per cent are getting less work now than they were pre-COVID.

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Original URL: https://www.heraldsun.com.au/news/where-you-can-find-a-job-in-victoria-right-now/news-story/0d036fdcbbe59cf6b7e4c68a80f9aa22